Bendris Noulg
First Post
See, I think the basis of it (OGC is shared, PI is not) is agreed upon by all (at least, that much is clear enough that there is no real debate). The rest falls into details. It's this ambiguity that has me more open to the concept of "crippled" OGC than others are; Of course, nothing prevents me from "uncrippling" those same rules, and I personally am opposed to releasing my own material "crippled".woodelf said:Just to pick nits: the WotC OGL is only a mostly-agreed-upon set of rules--there are still quite a few ambiguous bits. And, most specifically, i'm not confident that WotC *does* understand it perfectly. Their latest PI declaration with the revised D20SRD took almost everyone by surprise, as it seems to be not supportable by the license, implying that either (1) they don't understand the license, (2) they understand it but don't like it and are hoping no one will challeng them on it, or (3) the license is poorly worded, and doesn't say what it's supposed to mean, so everyone else doesn't understand it--raising the question of whether the intent or the wording of a contract is the important part, if the drafter does a poor job of translating the intent into wording.
As for WotC's PI designation, I see a 4th possibility: on occassion, I stumble upon something in the SRD that isn't supposed to be there (page numbers, book references, etc.), so the PI designation could very well just be a safety net for oversights in the pre-SRD scrub down, preventing terms/titles from becoming OGC because of an editing error. Although it's not a perfect example, we can consider the fact that, because of certain spells, the Shadow Plane, Ethereal Plane, Elemental Planes, Astral Plane and Outer Planes in concept and name were already OGC long before the MotP material was ported into the SRD. I also recall, after Mind Flayers, Displacer Beasts, and other critters were removed from the Draft SRD and thus never really released, that "final" versions of some things made mention of "the skin of a Displacer Beast" and another section (the summon [X] spells, I do believe) still listed creatures that weren't OGC (in short, the names of these things are OGC because they appeared in the released SRD, but the things themselves are not).
Does the "safety net" theory seem close to mark?
I seem to recall that interview (Ryan Dancey, here at ENWorld, right? Can't find it in the archives anymore...). At any rate, I don't think it's as "over the line" as it may appear. After all, it's purpose (small formatted rules content for easy portability) is clearly beyond the capability of the Player's Handbook (full sized and loaded with access information that may or may not be relevant to your individual game, such as Grayhawk deities and the like).Yeah, i'm still waiting for an answer on that one, too. But, when talking about subjective qualities like "good faith", neither can you simply declare that it clearly isn't stepping over the line--perhaps it is (even though it's perfectly legal). Though i'm inclined to say it isn't, seeing as how WotC said, right from teh start, "sure, you can do that", and qualified it not with "...but we don't want you to" but rather "...but you'll fail".
So, let's quantify the question with a few more examples:
Is Green Ronin's Pocket Grimoire: Arcane over that line? How about their Pocket Grimoire: Divine? Pocket Magica?
Is Mongoose's Ultimate Feats or Ultimate Prestige Classes over the line?
I guess I don't see there being a question in regards to compiling OGC for distribution; the companies are doing it, have been doing it, and will continue to do it. So it's either wrong (companies and fans can't do it) or it's right (companies and fans can do it), but it can't be right for some (companies can) and wrong for others (fans can't). Mongoose has done it. Green Ronin has done it. d20X is doing it. Ryan Dancey is (presumably, based on his proposed idea back in January) doing it (then again, he might not). Cergorach is doing it, as stated in this thread. And who knows how many others.
To which, I again state: Any business model that fails to take the re-distribution of OGC into account is a poorly thought out business model when applied to the Open Gaming environment which is designed around the concept of OGC re-distribution.